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SMR acct THE BISMARCK 'TKIBUNE SATURDAY, OCLOBER 29, 1932 The Bismarck Tribune At operere lewspaper T STATES oupest NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year........$7.20 Daily of mail per year (in Bis- seeseee 7. ’ t state outside Bismarck) ............ 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ...... seessseceessscess 6.00 Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ............. 15C Weekly by mail in Canada, per year ...... teeeeeeeseseeeeecens 2.00 3 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives i SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER | (Incorporated) | CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Feet on the Ground When the people of North Dakota go to the polls November 8 they will be asked to vote not only on a com- plete slate of national and state of- licers but upon a constitutional amendment and eight measures which have been placed upon the ballot by petition. { These nine issues bring to 21 the number which have been presented to the people of North Dakota for Solution in this one year. Thirteen additional proposals were kept off the ballot by the opposition of a majority of one of the state’s major political groups after a candidate for governor had urged that they be placed on the ballot. It is no insult to the intelligence of the people of the state to say that this wholesale presentation of ini- ijated measures is imposing an un- fair burden upon citizenship. Few persons have the time to study these Suggestions. Some who have the time to give to the study cannot find satisfactory sources of unbiased in- formation. There are indications, too, that a system which was designed to give the people the final voice in matters of importance to them and to the State is being perverted to serve the ideas of various interested minor- ities. Initiated measures may—and frequently do—contain jokers. The hard-pressed voter, intent upon his own business, easily may find that he has voted for something not to his own best interests. This tendency to abuse what was designed as a safeguard of the peo- ple’'s interests is reflected in the changing attitude of many who spon-; sored and supported the movement which placed the initiative, referen- dum and recall clauses in the state constitution. Some of these men have come to the conclusion that additional safeguards are needed to keep these instruments from being used unwisely or against the inter- |! ests of the people. First of the issues offered this year| is that to repeal the prohibition clause of the state constitution. It is the only constitutional amendment offered and it is the only issue which deserves a place upon the ballot, if the intentions of those who made popular votes upon such things pos- sible are followed. Prohibition has been before the electorate long enough for every voter to make up his mind, either for or against it. Certainly it has had full and free discussion over a long period of years. It has not been submitted! since June, 1928, and the question is one upon which a final decision | should be had if one can be reached.| Only two of the eight other meas- ures on the ballot have been before the public for more than a very brief period, and in the cases of those two! the electorate is being asked to re-| verse in November decisions which were made in June. These two issues are the declara- tion of a three-year moratorium and the legalizing of crop mortgages. By jthe chaff and eliminate the obvious people more than their present share of whatever prosperity the future may hold. ‘The real question is one of meth- od. On the one hand are those who would have the people express them- selves upon every question, regard- less of their opportunity to study the issue. On the other hand are {those who feel that the initiated ! provision of the state constitution is being overworked. In view of the difficulty of get- ting reliable information upon all questions, many voters would prefer to leave the law-making authority where the constitution originally placed it—in the hands of the legis- lature. Before @ bill can become law it must pass both house and senate. Committee hearings and debates give legislators ‘opportunity to inform themselves, a privilege which is denied to many voters. In these times—and the same thing is true at all times—it is quite as necessary to defeat bad legisla- tion as it is to enact good laws. The adage about acting in haste and re-; penting at leisure applies as much to law-making as to anything else. We are to have a new legislature— we hope one with a new viewpoint— within a few months. Its members will have opportunity to study all of the measures which are being offer- ed now. It can sift the wheat from jokers which are present in some of the bills presented. It can protect the taxpayer better than the tax- payer can protect himself. This newspaper has confidence in the incoming legislature. It feels that the next house and senate will] do their best for the people of North Dakota. It feels that their best will be better than the present efforts of, those who are urging initiated meas- ures. It suggests that the best thing to do, in all probability, is to vote “No” on every initiated measure of- fered and let the legislature decide later. That is what the legislature is for. As to the constitutional amend- ment most minds are made up how and the people are thoroughly fam- iliar with it. The Straw Vote Issue Rodney Dutcher, one of the keen- est correspondents at Washington, remarks that a new issue has been injected into the national campaign. It is the “straw vote issue” and he comments that it has been raised before, but that the Republicans and The attitude of the two parties on the Literary Digest straw Poll defined as follows: Republican—“Straw votes don't mean anything. The Literary Digest was wrong by 4,500,000 votes in 1916,” Democratic—“That poll is al- ways right. The Republicans didn't kick about it four years ago.” z | Into this muddle plunges the | Literary Digest editor with the state- | ment that there was not a national poll in 1916, | Unless they do reflect the trend of | sentiment, of course, straw polls are Worse than useless, but the Digest Poll has been sufficiently accurate in | the past to justify some faith in it. 1 Maybe one of these days we'll get to | the point where we will do all of our voting by posteard and let the Digest do the counting. ‘a The Chicago Tribune suggests that | bank directorates are too large, un- | wieldy and unresponsive to the de- | mands of responsible management. Some depositors will doubtless agree | with such a conclusion. a Modern love story: He wrapped his arms around her, then the car wrapped itself around a tree. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. Clean Up the Roads (Emmons County Record) | Postmaster R. A. Yeater of Hazel- ton made a splendid suggestion to the people of his community last week that can be followed out all over the county with good results. * Mr. Yeater pleads that patrons on the mail routes out of Hazelton burn | the weeds along the roadsides to pre- i vent the snow drifting in the roads this winter. We note that similar action has been taken in Dickey county where substantial majorities the people re- jected in June the moratorium scheme, then a five-year plan, and approved the proposal to outlaw crop! mortgages. It is apparent that, un- less the people express their distaste for this sort of thing we may have to vote upon them at every election the county commissioners have des- ignated a week to be known as “Road Clean-up Week” when the roads will be cleaned in every section of the county under the direction of the Toad officers. Citizens are asked to volunteer to assist in the work. Grass will be burned, which is sald to be @ simple matter, thus removing Hl ae Hard to Hold on and Hard to Let Go LET HIM wing NEVER GET Him Home ! LAY WITH HIM, UNCLE- He's Yours! Arthur Hopkins and tossed a play manuscript on the desk. 5 “Wish you'd find time to read this. Think you'll like it.” And the young man walked out. So unusual had been the procedure that Hopkins be- gan to read at once, At 5 o'clock a purchase order had been given. Just the other night, Hopkins brought to the street a melodrama called “Ren- dezvous.” And still they say Broad- way is a hard street to crack. * ek x ANOTHER WALLACE MYSTERY At the opening of “Criminal at Large,” was Johnny Weaver, creator of “Poems in America,” trying to get the London fog out of his lungs. It is a mystery play, one of the last of the late Edgar Wallace, who died suddenly out in Hollywood . . . “What @ neat idea it would be to build a mystery around the death of Wal- lace,” suggests Johnny Why not? ... The most versatile detec- tive story writer in the world dies mysteriously—for the purpose of the plot. And far from his native land +++ Who killed him? ... Maybe a reader! ... Or—oh, well, write your own! * eK NIGHT SCENE So to the opening of the Barney Gallant Greenwich Village spot, where everyone you ever met shows up ... But Barney is not his own master of ceremonies this year ... Walter O'Keefe was doing his stuff there just two seasons ago... Helen Morgan dancing by, exotic— but plump! Well, she can afford to be_... Writers, artists, players ... Funny, you see the same gang wherever you go, night after night ;++ Don’t they ever go home? ... finitives and Candidate Roosevelt uses “like” as a conjunction. years old, who smokes cigars, mere- ly doesn’t want to seem effeminate. taken of some grapes and sugar the other day—the old wine-bibber! student who slipped across the bor- der into Poland disguised as a cow, took the cow hide literally? (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) quor traffic, a liquor orgy, before they (the states) are convinced that conditions are best under prohibition. —Dr. William Hyde Russell, foun- der of Anti-Saloon League. restore prosperity in the United * & % Perhaps the Pittsburgh boy, 5 it TODAY ANNIVERSAR CONFLANS IS SHELLED * * * The scientist who says Amer- fica has enough coal to last 75,- 000 years Llger rd hea ar jas out as arioter, | On Oct. 29, 1918, Americans shelled r. 29, 1918, ll janitor will save this winte! | ine’ Gobiflane’ faeitn,” “Pd : ase i Gandhi is reported to have par-|ed on a seven-mile line east of Laon. Rhine Germans were in wild fight. In Italy, Allied forces captured Conegliano, five miles {rom the Piave, and pushed on along a front of 37 miles. Continuing its efforts for immed- ee The newspapermen at Geneva have given the League of Na- tions a pair of dice for settling disputes | speedily. Smake-eyes! | iste cessation of hostilities on. its lel ache adhe 4 fronts, Austria-Hungary sent a note to Secretary Lansing, asking him to intervene with President Wilson for an immediate armistice. In Germany, the federal council approved the bill amending the con- stitution in the form adopted by the Reichstag. The Bavarian premier notified Berlin that the Bavarian royal family would claim the im- perial throne in the event of Kaiser Wilhelm’s abdication. The republic of Czechoslovakia was proclaimed. Might you say that the Russian FN It may take the return of the li- FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: ee Europe has now done all it can to I But they just go... | get paid for it. I have to go... States without effective and prompt American cooperation—Dr. Nicholas is} or how to save your teeth may not inspire great enthusiasm among the dentists, that is, not officially. | the dentists’ wives, children, sisters, \ brothers-in-law and cousins are dif- | ferent. | members of dentists’ families are not at all scornful. are quite pleasant spoken. | adults is Certified milk. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE ||" wr cses we ver By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- Letters should be brief and written in No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. addressed envelope is enclosed. ink. Address Dr. William Brady, THE DENTIST'S WIFE SPILLS THE BEANS fc Once when the conductor of this column was about to address an audience on a child health program some ladies on the committee con- fessed that they had seriously consid- ered the idea of presenting me with an moment of my introduction to the enormous tooth brush at the My teachings anent dental hygiene But Some of these unofficial In fact some of them Dear Mr. Brady: My husband is a dentist. Our two children, aged four and half- Past-five, have perfect teeth. Flawless, well placed, perfectly aligned, perfectly clean. Neither child has ever owned a tooth- brush. Both children were thumb suckers until we finally succeeded in curing them at the age of two. The teeth of both parents are regrettably poor. The teeth of all their cousins, uncles and aunts are poor, or at best ordi- nary. The answer, we believe, is diet. Our children are carefully fed. Simple food; lots of raw vege- tables, lots of raw milk, quite a few natural sweets—figs, dates, etc. No between-meal lunches. Candy only after meat-and- vegetable meals. If a yellow stain occurs on the teeth we feed more orange or tomato juice, and the stain disappears. More than this, my husband has a “class” of young children whose teeth bid fair never to need his attention except for examination. Their story is the same as that of our own chil- dren. If we become paupers in our old age, it will be the fault of parents who are feeding their children intelligently. Ain't so? Again, sincerely yours, I have made just one change in the letter—I inserted the word raw before the word milk. Although the lady signs her name, the letter is on @ Separate sheet and I have mislaid | her address, so I can’t write to ask whether the milk used in her house- hold is raw. So we'll assume it is until we learn otherwise, for experi- ence has shown, particularly in Eng- land, that children who get RAW milk have better teeth than children who get only sterilized, pasteurized or Processed milk. The only raw milk that is always pure and safe for infants, children or The price of this finest, purest grade of milk is prohibitive for many families. But ordnary raw milk in many communi- ties, particularly the smaller towns where the milk is delivered to the infested with mice and it seems that she alley cat. babies or domestic pets to be en- dangered, use barium carbonate, spread on bread and butter or on dry toast or on a piece of fish, or bait. One nibble of this kills a mouse. I am an R, N. we were told that the anterior fon- tanelle closes at the age of 12 to 14! blazoned . months. My baby's anterior fontan-| pack when elle seems about the size of a dime! when Clayton, Jackson and Durante ++.» (Mrs. M. L.) back of head is usually obliterated by | the third month; soft spot on top of | they broke up and “Schnozzle” went head (anterior fontanelle) is usually | cut to Hollywood and rang up a re- ous water discharge occurs ... (Mrs. ing of lamb’s wool just within the nostril or wear a clip to keep the nostrils closed all the while you are in the water, thus excluding water from your nose. Of course swim- mers must breathe through the mouth anyway. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) health and hygiene, not to disease in care of this newspaper. the best authority to consult about the purity of the milk. If you have no such friend, then ask your local health officer whether the milk is for your children. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Getting Rid of Mice For over a year our house has been wih Gilbert Swan Democrats have changed si audience. For some feason they. did/the more we use traps the more mice| |= the question. Us: seen not carry out the idea—much to my/ we have... (Mrs. H. L. J.) te .GOING PLACES—SEEING THINGS q regret. Answer—l. Install a good cat, a] New York, Oct. 29—Merely an- 2. If there are no| other Broadway floor show opening at the Paramount grill, to all in- tents and purposes—but with a bit of human interest, for Eddie Jack- son was to go on alone “in songs.” Maybe you don’t get the plot ... But just around the corner, in the | biggest of bright lights, the name of : Jimmy “Schnozzle” Durante is em- .. And time was, way Broadway was more fun, Soft Spot I have a daughter 4 months old. In training school ran their own club and formed a Answer—Soft spot (fontanelle) at| team the like of which has never | been equaled for popularity ... But obliterated at the age of 18 months, but if it remains open till the end of the second year it is o. k. | putation that got him in the big money. Folk began to forget that Your | there was a Jackson and a Clayton. baby is normal. ; So Eddie Jackson came on “in Mouth Breathing songs.” And for six minutes, the I am trying to become a good cheer leaders greeted him. So he swimmer. I have to patronize pools.| got back on “the map.” And will These are treated with some chem-| doubtless stay Pages all winter. * ® ical which seems to cause great a BROADWAY SIDELIGHT tation of my nose. Half an hour after leaving the pool my nose be-} About noon time on a recent day, comes clogged with mucus and irri-| a’ young man named Barton Mac- tated and swollen and later a copi- Lean walked into the offices of . | HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle “ a mortar, 1 Upright sur- . Before. tace that EAB] BAUSDISITE] (CAD) 12 Nettner bounds any a 13 Onager. opening, as 18 Registance, a door. 20 Curses. 5 Overhead. 22 Hop bush, 10 Rock or cliff. 23 Goddess of 14 To affirm. Peace. 24 Resinous sub- stance. 27 Plant, 28 To wash lightly. 29 Wrath. 30 Mountain pass, 32 Globe. 33 To slash, 36 Hopelessness, 40 Having masts, 41 Period. 43 Noose. 46 Wounds with the teeth. 49 Sea eagle. 50 Part of a 6 Catalogues, bird’s bill, 7 Oil (suffix).~ . 51 Flatfish. 8 What race are 52 Wickedly. in the majority 53 Edgar Allan in Belgium? ——, poet? 9 Net weight of 55 Striped fabric, U5 Pretentious rural resi- dence. 16 God of love, 17 Goes to bed. 19 Rubber, pencil ends, 21 Either of two | distinct cove- | nants of God. 23 Image. 25 Snowshoe, 26 Having wings. 29 Satiric, 31 Confidential. 34 Corded cloth. 35 Thick shrub. 37 Three letters i standing for “His Royal Highness. 38 Antelope. 39 Painted, VERTICAL 1 Fruit vessel. 2 Farewell! 3 Encountered. 4 Native Eng- lishman. 5 To what class do birds be- long? 47 Masculine. 48 Doubting the truth of the Scriptures (variant). 51 Order of in- sects including house flies, 54 Having mad aud left a will. 58 Herb. 59 More fas- tidious. 61 Black. 62 Shed as blood. consumer within an hour or two after milking, is a perfectly wholesome and. safe food. Your family physician is Cont ALL LETTERS IN THE CHARACTER 2 ALPHABET EXCEPT J 2 42 Injunction, 63 Notched. acontainer. 562000 pounds. 44Enthusiasm. 64 Thin inner 10 Implement 67 To finish, 45 To ery. sole. used in @ 60 Company. ee & A FELLOW CAN'T REST! They're all out again at the new and very swanky Montparnasse Club, with Charley Lucas, who has entre- preneured all over the world, in charge ... But there’s Fay Marbe, the most shapely*character player, protean artist and actress, who whis- pers that she'll have a house-warm- ing Sunday in her new Ambassador Hotel apartment. Oh, well, you can’t even have Sundays to yourself at this season! And that quietest fellow, and most unassuming, you'll see at any of the spots just now—Adolph Menjou. He works at flirting only on the screen. SS i Barbs | o ———+ even. President Hoover splits Murray Butler, president Columbia university. ee * If the time arrives when our people find it necessary to pay their sons salary or wages to fight in defense of the country, that day marks the beginning of the end of this republic. —General John F, Army. O'Ryan, U. 8. * oe * I have demonstrated what I set out to prove, that is, the superiority of British airplane manufacturers.— Captain James A. Mollison, transat- lantic flyer. te * The progress of industrial main- | tenance has been interrupted to such {@ degree that today more than 50 per cent of the machinery, equip- |ment and plant facilities in Ameri- The campaign appears to be all! can factories is obsolete—A. W. Rob- in- ertson, Pittsburgh executive. A shocking dress in the current style is often charged. bi SYNOPSIS Leaving Hawaii shortly after her father’s death, young and beautiful Fanchon Meredith goes to San Francisco, where she meets and ‘oves a handsome man named Tony. Fanchon is shocked to learn that Tony is a racketeer, implicated in a fecent murder. She, too,—is now wanted, Fanchon escapes in an. air, lane Under the name of “Smith.” velyn Howard, whom she had met on the boat coming from Hawaii, is aboard. Evelyn is enroute to New York to live with her aunt, the wealthy Mrs. Carstairs, whom she has never met. After Fanchon con- fides in Evelyn, the latter treats her coolly. The plane crashes and Fanchon is the only survivor. She decides to escape Tony and the past and start life anew by masquerading as Evelyn. She requests a doctor to write ‘Mrs. Carstairs that “Evelyn’ is safe. CHAPTER VIII Half a dozen times before she reached New York, Fanchon was seized with a frantic desire, born of sheer, blind panic, to. get out at the first best station, to run away, to hide, to find a ship that sailed for far countries and alien seas, to run away from the old life of*Fanchon leredith, the hunted life of “Miss Smith,” the self chose, stolen life of Evelyn Howard, who was going. toward safety, toward people who cared, toward freedom. . . . Once she rose and took down the borrowed hat from the rack. Once she picked up the straw suit case the farmer's wife had loaned her, with a few bare necessities in it; once she walked, suitcase in hand, to the door of the drawing room and laid her hand upon the knob. But returned at once to her seat by the window and her bewildered, frantic thinking. She could not go back. She must go on. Her mind felt hurt and bruised with the effort at thought, her bandaged arm ached, her wrenched muscles cried out. “You have a very bad shock and shaking up,” Doctor Warren had said, “and I wish you would stay on with Mrs. Lawson for a few days. But, if you won't, you won't. Only my orders—professional or- ders, are—that when you reach your destination, you permit yourself to be put to bed and you stay there. She had promised. At the first big city they reached, reporters boarded the train and in- vaded her drawing room. Eager, shock-haired boys, one lean, sallow man and a couple of pretty “sob sisters.” They apologized for their intrusion, but told her that in the interest of the news and public they must have her first hand story of the accident. She knew that it was safer not to antagonize them, They perched on the seats, on the arms of things, even squatted on the floor, listening ee te te eee lee ARREST ABE AR? 2ew OU ad iad PLEELICL | coll OO 2 ed avidly, The train stopped over there for half an hour. Daring that time Fanchon told them what she recalled of the accident itself ... of the first part of the flight. Eames, one of the reporters said, had been an important man in his town. This was being played up in the press. The pilot, too, McKinon, for he had had a war record and had also been pie on a successful flight from Eng- nd to Australia. le also was news, said the reporters, not callous, not unkind, simply seeking to feed their master, the insatiable press. And Fanchon herself was_news, Os now they all knew that Evelyn loward was a niece of Mrs, Car- stairs—the Mrs. Carstairs. That was news, And news, too, the wire that reached her at the same station at which the reporters got on. - _ “Waiting anxiously. Collin would have come out and brought you the ves of the way, but he is in Canada an wired “Aunt Jennie.” x COPYRIGHT 1931, BY FAITH BALDWIN “ DISTRIBUTED cannot be reached in time,” inenber that she had been ASQUERADE by FAITH BALDWIN BY KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, [NC... By now they all knew, that Evelyn was-a niece of Mrs. Carstaire—THE Mrz. Carstairs. Collin? thought Fanchon. But during their rapid fire conversation, the reporters enlightened her. Col- lin was Mrs. Carstairs’ only son. A ame hunter, A polo payer. An le bachelor, One of the most cligible. He was in the North Woods at present, she learned, simply by listening when one of the reporters asked her: “We understand that Mr, Collin Carstairs is up North?” and by nodding intelligently. ¥ Evelyn hadn’t spoken of Collin, Why? wondered Fanchon. Had she a picture of herself? they wanted to know. ; She had not. But a camera mai was there, Fanchon raised her hands protestingly. No pictures! she begged, She hadn’t thought of that. Tony might see the picture Tony might recognize her. ... The picture was, however, taken, She thought courageously that, after all, some hope was left. Newspaper pictures were notoriously unrecog- nizable; the borrowed hat had shad- owed her face; and her face itself was pale and almost Baunt with the shock of what she had been through. He might not see it; or, seeing, rec-| u ognize her. They asked her aboyt “Miss Smith.” To all their questions she ae there was now no one left of all the party to bear witness against her—that she had never seen the other girl until they boarded the plane together, That she under- stood she had made her home in San Francisco and was leaving it to take up work—library work, Fan- chon ught—in New York. And that she had heard “Miss Smith” say that she had no living rel: No, she did not know mame; had never heard it. One reporter mentioned careless ly, that the girl had died... an hour or so before they had boarded Fan. chon’s train, Fanchon’s eyes filled with nervous tears. Dead, Evelyn Howard con- stituted no danger for her. Living, she would have been a perpetual menace, Dead, Fanchon could. ree F ‘oung, jhe had loved life, that she had . her given that looked forward with eagerness to what life was to hold for her. Dead, Fanchon could forget that in Fan- chon’s own trouble Evelyn Howard had been cold, unkind and condemn- atory. Dead, Fanchon could for that Evelyn had refused to help her —and had branded her—without words—a gangster’s girl... a girl that one “didn’t know,” whom one couldn't “afford” to know. Dead, Evelyn Howard was free; and her death made Fanchon free. The reporters left, apologizing, pleasant, hurrying back with their news, “Sole Survivor's Story of Plane Crash Which Killed Seven,” they would tick out on their keys. It would presently be flashed over the wires of the Associated Press. The train moved on, Fanchon leaned her head against the dusty plush cushions and closed her eyes, She couldn’t go back now. She irrevocably committed herself. There was nothing to do but to permit her- self to be carried on—and on... and eventually to step off the train into whatever destiny awaited her. She found herself speculating on Mrs. Carstairs’ son, lin. pon the reason why Evelyn had not mentioned him to her. It would have been more natural had Evelyn meritioned him, more in with Evelyn’s character, Evelyn had been more than a little caste conscious when it came to Jennie Carstairs; she had been more tian x little proud, more ans i anxious to impress upon Fanchon the glories ai 4 bruited wonders of Mrs, Carstairs’ social position and money. Of the woman herself she had had little to say, which was also natural, as she had never known her. But she had not spoken of the son at all. This seemed extraordinarily Strange to Fanchon, thinking it over, as it would have been the most com. fstensie thing in the world for velyn to have mentioned this “eligible” , cousin, this big game hunter, this polo player. Why, then, had she been silent? Copyright 1931 By Faith Baldwin Distrib King Features Byadicate, ine, ve 1